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Page 1: Writing a Literature Review - Home | University of … a...Writing a Literature Review Higher Education Language & Presentation Support David Sotir – Advisor Contact us HELPS (Higher

Writing a Literature Review

Higher Education Language & Presentation Support

Page 2: Writing a Literature Review - Home | University of … a...Writing a Literature Review Higher Education Language & Presentation Support David Sotir – Advisor Contact us HELPS (Higher

David Sotir – Advisor Contact us

HELPS (Higher Education Language & Presentation Support) •Location: CB01.05.25 •Telephone: 9514 9733 •Email: [email protected] •Website: www.helps.uts.edu.au

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Learning Objectives

• To understand the purpose, necessary requirements and

elements for writing a literature review

• To ensure “voice” is clearly expressed through the use of certain linguistic structures

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What is a Literature Review?

A literature review is a description of the literature relevant to a particular field or topic. It is a critical assessment of the relevant literature and the effective evaluation of these documents in relation to the research being proposed.

http://www.canberra.edu.au/studyskills/writing/literature

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What is 'literature'?

‘Literature’ covers everything relevant that is written on a topic: • books • journal articles • newspaper articles • historical records • government reports •theses and dissertations, etc.

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What is a Literature Review?

• Presents the theory of the research • Presents the research methodology • Outlines what is missing the gap that your research

intends to fill • It has an introduction, body and conclusion, well-formed

paragraphs, and a logical structure. • In essays you use relevant literature to support your

argument and ideas. In a literature review, the literature itself is the subject of discussion.

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Purpose

• To demonstrate your scholarly ability to identify relevant information and to outline existing knowledge.

• To identify the 'gap' in the research that your study is attempting to address, positioning your work in the context of previous research and creating a 'research space' for your work.

• To evaluate and synthesise the information in line with the concepts that you have set yourself for the research.

• To produce a rationale or justification for your study.

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Getting started

• Always keep in mind that the literature review needs to relate to and explain your research question.

• Once you have your question you will be able to refine and narrow down the scope of your reading

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The literature search

Find out what has been written on your subject. Use as many bibliographical sources as you can to find relevant titles. The following are likely sources: Bibliographies and references in key textbooks and recent journal articles. Your supervisor or tutor should tell you which are the key texts and relevant journals. Abstracting databases, such as Proquest, Sage etc.

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Reading

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Reading with and for a purpose helps you to quickly locate, evaluate and read relevant research. Step 1 - Look at the Table of Contents, the Abstract, headings and sub-headings, to see if the text is relevant. Learn to use efficient scanning and skimming reading techniques. Step 2 If relevant read it thoroughly to find specific research to support your review.

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Probe Further

• What are the author’s credentials? • area of expertise; number of citations; institutional

connections • When was the text published? How recent is it? When

was the website updated?

• How much of the content is fact and how much opinion? Is the language objective or emotive?

• Is the argument supported by evidence? What kind of evidence? How is the argument developed?

• Do you agree with the opinions stated?

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Useful questions

• What definitions does it use? • What is its general methodological approach? What

methods are used? • What type of study is it? Is it an empirical report, a

theoretical study, a sociological or political account, historical overview, etc?

• What is the author's stated or implied purpose? • What conclusions has the author made? • What points kinds of data back up the conclusions • Does it follow a particular school of thought? • Is it related to other researchers school of thought?

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Your thoughts

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Summarise your notes for each reading. Remember to write down the full bibliographical details This will save you an enormous amount of time later on. It is also useful to write down your own thoughts on / about the readings. These are useful when you revisit the notes and / or use them in your writings to create your own academic voice.

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Your voice

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Your ‘voice’, - your perspective, position or standpoint, should be clearly identifiable in the literature review Because you are writing about other people’s work it is easy for your own ‘voice’ to be lost and reads like a mixture of different tones and arguments. Your theoretical position is clearly and strongly stated and that your critical evaluations are an integral part of this. It is important that your language indicates your own or other writers’ attitudes to the question or issues

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Think Critically

• Presenting a point of view in a structured, clear & rational way

• Reflecting on issues in a methodical way, using logic & insight

• Drawing conclusions about arguments based on evidence

• Identifying others’ positions, assertions & claims • Evaluating evidence from alternative points of view • Weighing up arguments & evidence in a balanced way • Recognising false logic & other persuasive devices • Reading between the lines – understanding subtext

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Remember

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Literature reviews : • integrate the research of various authors • show similarities and differences of ideas • show wide reading • show analysis and critical evaluation of what the student has

read

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Organising, analysing and planning your summaries

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Review notes: • what authors agree and disagree? • cluster similar research together, e.g. what information is

similar or different. • what major questions remain unanswered? • what are the possible directions for future research? To organise your research you can draw a mind map and organise the research into major points

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Mind maps

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https://www.dlsweb.rmit.edu.au/lsu/content/2_assessmenttasks/assess_tuts/lit_review_LL/example1.html

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Writing the Introduction

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Introduction should include: •the nature of the topic under discussion (the topic of your thesis) • the parameters of the topic (what does it include and exclude)? • the basis for your selection of the literature It must tell the reader the following: • what you are going to cover in the review • the scope of your research • how the review ties in with your own research topic

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Writing the Introduction

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https://www.dlsweb.rmit.edu.au/lsu/content/2_assessmenttasks/assess_tuts/lit_review_LL/conclusion.html

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The body

A literature review synthesises many texts in one paragraph. Each paragraph (or section if it is a long thesis) of the literature review should classify and evaluate the themes of the texts that are relevant to your thesis; each paragraph or section of your review should deal with a different aspect of the literature.

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Structure

• Chronological organisation • The discussion of the research/articles is ordered according to an historical

or developmental context. • The 'Classic' studies organisation • A discussion or outline of the major writings regarded as significant in your

area of study. (Remember that in nearly all research there are 'benchmark' studies or articles that should be acknowledged).

• Topical or thematic organisation • The research is divided into sections representing the categories or

conceptual subjects for your topic. The discussion is organised into these categories or subjects.

• Inverted pyramid organisation • The literature review begins with a discussion of the related literature from

a broad perspective. It then deals with more and more specific or localised studies which focus increasingly on the specific question at hand.

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Paragraphs

• A main statement / idea that you are putting forward, ie topic

sentence • definitions in use; • evidence from current/ previous research studies to support /

argue your idea, showing where the writers agree and / or disagree

• current discoveries about the topic; • principal questions that are being asked; • current mainstream versus alternative differing theoretical

assumptions, differing political outlooks, and other conflicts • general conclusions that are being drawn; • summing up and linking to the next idea (paragraph).

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Verbs for referencing

To incorporate quotations / references into a literature review, you can use a variety of verbs. Verbs also allow the writer to indicate the degree to which they support the author of the research, e.g. claims that versus argues that.

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Verbs for referencing

Suggest Argue Contend Outline Focus on Defines Concludes States Maintains

Found that Promotes Established Asserts Shows Claims Reports Mentions Address

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https://www.dlsweb.rmit.edu.au/lsu/content/2_assessmenttasks/assess_tuts/lit_review_LL/verbs.html

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Example

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https://www.dlsweb.rmit.edu.au/lsu/content/2_assessmenttasks/assess_tuts/lit_review_LL/conclusion.html

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Your voice

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Conclusion

A summary of major agreements and disagreements in the literature A summary of general conclusions that are being drawn. A summary of where your thesis sits in the literature (Remember! Your thesis could become one of the future texts on the subject—how will later research students describe your thesis in their literature reviews?)

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In summary

• Identify your research question • Identify and locate appropriate information • Read and critically evaluate the information that

you locate • File and store your readings and notes • Plan, organise and write critically about the

literature that you have located • Use paragraphs - Introduction, body and

Conclusion

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Always remember

• Critically examine the literature

• Make your “voice” clear

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References

• Hart, C. (1998). Doing a literature review: Releasing the social science research imagination. London, Sage.

• The Learning Centre, UNSW, Getting started on your literature review. • Hyland, K. (1999). Disciplinary discourses: Writer stance in research articles.

In C. Candlin & K. Hyland (eds) Writing: Texts, processes and practices. London: Longman.

• Phillips, E., Pugh, D. (1996). How to get a Ph.D: A handbook for students and their supervisors. Open University press, Buckingham.

• Ryan, J. (1997). Chinese Australian history. In W. Hudson & G. Bolton (eds) Creating Australia: Changing Australian history. Allen & Unwin, Sydney.

• https://www.dlsweb.rmit.edu.au/lsu/content/2_assessmenttasks/assess_tuts/lit_review_LL/conclusion.html

• http://www.canberra.edu.au/studyskills/writing/literature

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Having Trouble?

What can you do if you don’t understand what the assignment question is asking you?

• Ask in class • Go see your lecturer personally (take a draft) • Go see another member of faculty • Ask peers/classmates • Email your lecturer for help • See a HELPS advisor (drop-in or 1:1 consultation) • ALWAYS seek help if you need it!!

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ssu.uts.edu.au/helps

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